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WIKIBRANDS: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace
WIKIBRANDS: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace
WIKIBRANDS: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace
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WIKIBRANDS: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace

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Learn how today's hottest, most successful businesses are tapping into social media and other customer-driven tools and technologies to build, expand, or revive their brands

Launched from branding guru Don Tapscott's landmark $10 million research project on the intersection of technology and business models, WikiBrands explain what your business needs to do NOW to embrace the power of p-2-p technologies like word-of-mouth, user generated content, social media, microblogging, crowdsourcing, and customer rating systems to engage customers and enlist them in brand building and value-enhancement.

Featuring fascinating case studies of how Microsoft, P&G, Nike, Starbucks, Ford, Best Buy, Zappos, and others, launched, built, expanded, or rebuilt their brands through Wiki-style collaboration with customers, this book is part wake-up call, part action plan-and the total blueprint for how you can drive innovation and growth through technology-based immersive customer interaction.

  • Foreword by Don Tapscott, author of Wikinomics, Digital Capital, and Grown Up Digital
  • Supported by an online tookit including a Wikibrand Hall of Fame, videoblog, and Wikibrand guidebook.
  • Shows how companies like Frito-Lay and Dell use Wiki marketing and social media in ways unimaginable just a few years ago to engage and connect with consumers and drive millions of dollars in sales
Inside WikiBrands:
The Six Benefits of Wiki Brand Advocacy • Measurement and Metrics • Community Management • The B-to-B Wiki Brand • The Personal Wiki Brand • 25 Things to Know in 25 Minutes
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 24, 2010
ISBN9780071752350
WIKIBRANDS: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace: Reinventing Your Company in a Customer-Driven Marketplace

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    WIKIBRANDS - Sean Moffitt

    PART 1

    THE WIKIBRANDS STORY

    CHAPTER 1

    THE BIRTH OF WIKIBRANDS

    From, Ownership, Trust, Want, Preference, Love, and Now Partlclpation—a 150-Year Fascination

    wikibrand(s): noun

    A progressive set of organizations, products, services, ideas, and causes that tap the powers of customer participation, social influence, and collaboration to drive business value.

    Derived from the Hawaiian word wiki, traditionally meaning quick but more currently meaning tribal knowledge and a collaborative website, and the Middle English word torch, whose current business meaning is a distinctive name identifying a product or a manufacturer.

    Individual commitment to a group effort—that is what makes a team work, a company work, a society work, a civilization work.

    —VINCE LOMBARDI,

    legendary football coach

    Wikibrands represent the future of business—a future that calls for a fundamental shift in long-held business management tenets on how we approach customers. We have entered a new generation of brand building. The litmus test for a thriving business in this marketplace is Does your brand deliver genuine participation? This issue does not touch marketing alone nor is it solely a public relations concern. Neither is it single-mindedly a technology or social media manifesto. However, if you are in the business of driving company direction and delivering winning performance in today’s customer-controlled marketplace, wikibranding is a wake-up call, strategy guide, and execution road map, as relevant for the C-suite as it is for front-line managers.

    Let us take a step back. Since 1875, and likely even before, when Bass Ale registered the first branded trademark, brands have become a controlling force in the marketplace, representing something customers look for alternatively to buy, trust, want, prefer, or love. In many companies, the brand has become their single most important operating and financial asset.

    For more than a century, businesses have effectively cultivated customer loyalty, competitive advantage, and positive benefit perceptions for their owners through the tools of brand management. Traditional mass marketing efforts have acted as long-term value generators, allowing brands to command significant price premiums over commodity and price-based adversaries. Coca-Cola, IBM, BMW, McDonald’s, and Heineken have epitomized the strength of a well-positioned brand marketed to a mass consumer audience through traditional media channels. In fact, Coca-Cola corporate lore claims that if the company suddenly lost all of its physical assets, it could get funding to rebuild the entire enterprise using only the power of the brand as collateral.

    Although there are many more recent headlines like Can the Wrong Fame Smear Your Brand, Attack of the Blogs, Brands Under Attack, and The Decline of Brands, we assert that brands are still very relevant to the evolution of postindustrial business strategy and the building of business value. Face it: brands still belong, even in the marketplace of the future.

    Business founders and managers can depart or retire. Organizations can be right-sized. Media can be overhauled. Production can be completely outsourced. Logos can change. Whether you like it or not, what remains is still a mystifying belief in brands. Don’t take our word for it. Think about what might tempt you. If Apple launched a refrigerator, wouldn’t you be the slightest bit interested? If Google opened a restaurant, wouldn’t a good chunk of you line up around the corner? If BMW launched a personal computer, wouldn’t you give it a test drive? If World of Warcraft launched a real-life amusement park, a large percentage of its eleven million players would probably make the pilgrimage.

    Before we appear too defensive on the side of the brand flag and conventional mass marketing theory, be assured that we believe a significantly new practice needs to exist. The status quo is not an option. We’re not entirely throwing the brand baby out with the bathwater, but we see all too clearly a call to change, particularly in how business goes about building itself up in a customer-controlled marketplace. We must guard ourselves against laziness, against allowing our vision to blur what is going on in the world outside the corporate walls. Too often it is easy to become comfortable and stop experimenting. Even entrepreneurs and start-ups can be guilty of blindly imitating outdated best practices and consultants’ advice that worked in a bygone era. As John Lennon summarized, Life is what is happening to you while you’re busy making other plans. Perhaps the famous Beatle was a wikibrand advocate ahead of his time.

    Wikibranding provides a manifesto that allows progressive-minded souls—and even some establishment types—to implement the change required in their organizations. In Groundswell: Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies, Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff make the math pretty simple: engaged brands are growing their value by 18 percent; those that don’t engage are declining by 6 percent.¹ This is a chicken-or-egg argument, but the choice is pretty obvious: engage.

    For a long time, companies created products and services and then pushed them out to customers using the tools of the period. The Four Ps of marketing—product, place, promotion, and price—were sacrosanct (we will present two alternative versions of this model). When strategies were formed, the role of the customer was in the business of planning and pushing out these messages through media intermediaries. The message was controlled; the role of consumers was to listen and buy. Now faced with a dramatic shift in how technology-enabled collaboration changes relationships, an Internet-savvy generation will bring about huge changes in business and culture. How businesses create value through brands will be transformed by the relationships and experiences these businesses have with customers. Brands will no longer be an abstract concept in the mind but will require a new, more sophisticated architecture that involves two-way conversation and integrity.

    What caused the shift? Consumers found that, through peer-to-peer connection and social media, they had a voice in the brand conversation. It has been suggested by both traditionalists and some early Web adopters that five years into the mainstreaming of social media, people will become tired of these tools. In exchange for the return of their privacy and leisure time, they will gladly placate themselves with the passive consumption of entertaining messages via big media funded by organizations, albeit in different formats. For those people seeking relief from this social media pollution, we’re sorry to say the genie is out of the bottle for good.

    Collaborative technologies and social media that connect family, friends, colleagues, and interest groups are not just a fad; they are the currency that runs the future marketplace. The growth and reach of new media and new technology is mind-boggling and undeniable. Compared to even a decade ago, the pace of change is staggering. As recently as 2000, could we have conceived of a world in which five hundred million people from around the world spend an average of forty-two minutes a day chatting with, liking, checking in with, and playing with each other in a digital playground called Facebook?

    The early twenty-first century is distinguished by the pace and intensity of change in the marketing and media landscape. Trends such as the emergence of more than one hundred million citizen bloggers,² more than two billion Internet users,³ and more than four billion mobile phone users⁴ (which is more than have regular access to running water) only begin to tell the story.

    Could we have predicted, even optimistically, that Internet use would vault ahead of the incumbent media heavyweight TV? Well, it has. With a reach of more than two billion and one-hundred-fold growth since 1995, the Internet has knocked off marketers’ mainstay, and it isn’t looking back. Although some user fatigue has occurred in the blogosphere and on social networking sites, people are collectively spending 82 percent more time on social networks in 2010 than in the previous year.

    We admit this is a real paradox. Brands have never been more important to companies than they are today, even in an atmosphere in which customers have taken control. The tools to build these globally known stalwarts or hungry underdogs are far less predictable than they’ve ever been. Stasis is not an option, but that is what a lot of companies exhibit. Marketing organizations figure prominently among the casualties of this new age. Two-thirds of organizations have rebranded themselves in the last three years.⁶ A majority of senior marketers are feeling dissonance within their organizations and distance from their external customer base.⁷ The average tenure of a chief marketing officer is hovering at around twenty-eight months, a full two years less than the next most tenuous executive position: CIOs.⁸

    In the first decade of the millennium, spurred on by the global economic correction, the proverbial pin dropped on the marketing function. Forward-thinking marketers have begun to recognize the gap. Only 6 percent of executive marketers rate their digital operations as excellent; the biggest need identified in new plans is to construct a digital marketing makeover in their platforms, programs, and people.⁹ Senior marketers have begun to realize that if they want to avoid having their corporate stars eclipsed, they need to switch their attention from what they do (advertising, communications, public relations, and sales) to how they do it (customer connection, brand engagement, and online community participation).

    If marketers have recognized their loss of influence inside their organizations, they almost certainly know of their current diminishing status outside of it too. The environment can be downright hostile. Small groups of well-organized customers have publicly exposed market titans such as Dell, Wal-Mart, and Sony for employing less than ethical or substandard company practices. Not only has this ripple effect of well-connected customer dissatisfaction disrupted the way companies operate, but it also points to a power shift in the emerging brand landscape—a shift toward customers.

    Why? Quite simply, the levers of brand development have changed dramatically over the last twenty years. Since the height of mass marketing’s efficiency peaked in the early eighties, a number of trends relating to media (such as fragmentation), marketing (such as customization), marketplace activity (such as abbreviated product life cycles), and broader cultural behavior (such as heterogeneous consumers) have collectively diminished the effectiveness of traditional branding efforts.

    Winning companies and brands are succeeding by learning to engage and co-create branding efforts with their most loyal and engaged customers:

    Traditional packaged goods marketers such as Procter & Gamble are creating powerful new customer connections through frequent and experimental use of Facebook; word-of-mouth relationship forums such as Vocalpoint, Tremor, Being Girl, and Home Made Simple; and traditional/social mashup ¹⁰ hits like the Old Spice Guy video campaign.

    Fashion upstart lululemon is harnessing the evangelical passion of its employees and ambassador networks.

    Software company Intuit is opening itself to a steady stream of innovation and applications, as well as customer support, based on online community involvement.

    Open source companies, like Mozilla, are tapping brand enthusiasm via comprehensive, community-based marketing efforts.

    Retail icons, such as Starbucks, are making marketing and customer orientation central to their brand by mastering customer experience.

    Maverick start-up company Naked Pizza is revolutionizing customers’ relationship with fast food through a preachy, healthy brand image that interacts with its clients via Twitter (to the uninitiated, a microblogging platform that allows users to text messages known as tweets of up to 140 characters).

    Rather than lobbing promises and messages ceaselessly over the chaos of today’s tone-deaf marketplace, these smart companies are thinking about how active customer participation can get their brands noticed, talked about, and endorsed through their customer grapevine. Instead of controlling the brand, marketers are opening it up to exciting new possibilities. In short, these brands are going wiki. The wikibranding movement is reshaping the way in which companies build brand value. Traditional notions of stage-managing brands are shifting in favor of an open and authentically shared ownership among marketer, employees, and customers.

    The Evolution of Brands

    Perhaps the march to a wikibrand world is Darwinism at play. A historical perspective suggests that we could have predicted the next wave of brand building. For a long period of time, a brand was simply a logo indicating ownership, as shown in Table 1.1. As mass production emerged in the nineteenth century, early packaged goods companies used branding to establish familiarity and trust in markets that were more accustomed to local products.

    TABLE 1.1 GENERATIONS OF BRAND BUILDING

    The sophistication of branding increased in the early twentieth century as brands began to convey attributes and associations that implied ambition. The rising standard of living in the West increased discretionary income, while the emergence of new media, like radio and TV, enabled companies to market their products in an engaging fashion to broader audiences. Brands became less about satisfying basic needs and more about satisfying desires and communicating social status through ownership.

    By the eighties, as markets became increasingly saturated with imported products, line extensions, and generic competition, brand positioning and brand equity management became essential tools for marketers seeking to highlight key product attributes and establish preference over their competitors.

    More recently, the narrowing of product performance differences, record levels of customer cynicism, and the increasing depth of media volume have had brand owners striving to establish emotional connections with customers based on kindred values, likable brand stories, and enhanced design aesthetics. Kevin Roberts, CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi, anointed these popularly as lovemarks. Today, the plan-and-push-and-love-us approach to branding is increasingly impotent, and brand owners are being forced to consider new options. Customer trust and satisfaction in brands is declining precipitously, while the customer’s ability to find pertinent information, inform others, and self-organize has never been stronger.¹¹

    Positive and negative brand experiences and content now spread rapidly across social circles as barriers have virtually been erased by evolving Web software, multimedia, mobile, electronic, and file storage technologies. Today’s successful brand strategies rely less on managing perceptions, spinning information, and controlling the message—the hallmarks of an earlier time.

    If we can learn anything from this recent history of brands, it is the following:

    Fundamental changes in brand management coincide with big shifts in media, communications, and marketplace conditions. We have that now.

    Branding shifts have all been a reaction to some kind of scarcity. At one time, these were constraints on capital, distribution channels, markets, media availability, and shelf space; now the scarcity is consumer attention, time, and trust.

    Every era of change has brand winners and losers; the winners adapt to change before it’s too late. We’re seeing this play out firsthand in the meteoric rise and fall of companies.

    While most changes are evolutionary, the windows of opportunity between changes are getting smaller, as society adapts to new paradigms more quickly. In today’s business climate, cultural adoption of change has never been more agile.

    Each brand epoch has been marked by a distinct generational tribe with common cultural hallmarks that hold sway over the culture for a time: the flappers and Gatsbys of the Roaring Twenties, the liberal and free-loving baby boomers, the innovative and anticorporate Generation X, and now the connected and collaborative Net Generation (also called Generation Y, or Millennials).¹²

    The Marketing Divide: The Customer Is in Control

    The branding power of traditional media (TV, print, and radio) has been seriously eroded by new consumer technologies such as personal video recorders (PVRs), satellite radio (such as Sirius), online social networks (including Facebook, Bebo, Orkut, and MySpace), and user-generated sharing sites like YouTube. Simultaneously, there’s been an explosion of product choice, competition, and variety, which will only increase as rising giants China and India spawn a growing number of truly global competitors across diff erent industries.

    At the intersection of all this technology and choice stands a customer who is faced with the challenge of keeping up with this fast-moving world. Digitally adept people are arguably the best-positioned market segment to deal with this glut of activity, and they have become amazingly good at multitasking, filtering out marketing messages, and arriving at purchase decisions based on information from their peers. The net effect: the customer is in control (Figure 1.1).

    The Media: The Noise Grows Louder

    Network TV viewership is at its lowest point in history. Music radio is in steep decline. Newspaper circulation has been slipping since 1987. Magazine, book, and box office sales are stagnant, while physical CD and DVD sales are declining. Increasingly, these traditional media formats are being augmented and even replaced by a cacophony of Web-based media and other alternatives, such as ringtones, game consoles, digital signage, branded entertainment, and sponsorship avenues.

    FIGURE 1.1 THE MARKETING DIVIDE Source: Agent Wildfire Inc.

    Paradoxically, the diminishing returns on traditional media have sparked a vicious media spiral. In an effort to bolster waning audience attention and lessening impact, traditional media have hiked advertising volume. The average duration of commercial time has risen to eighteen minutes for every hour of programming on some TV stations. Every year, TV clutter increases 1–3 percent.¹³ This tidal wave of noise serves to increase consumer dissatisfaction and tune-out. ¹⁴ Even more ironically, this spawns even higher investments in traditional media advertising. The result is that marketers are paying substantially more to reach diminishing audiences of disinterested and dissatisfied consumers.¹⁵

    At the same time, cross-media usage is on the rise. Today’s eyeballs do not have the same value as their predecessors did a century ago, when undivided attention was the norm. For example, 70 percent of current media users claim to be consuming multiple media concurrently on a regular basis.¹⁶ Members of the Net Generation are notorious multitask jugglers and voracious media consumers, enjoying an average of twenty hours’ worth of media within a seven-hour period; it’s a safe bet that today’s eyeballs are strained from plenty of darting around.¹⁷

    As the din of media intensifies, the opportunity to create a shared moment with the customer slips further away. Adding to the confusion is the sheer assortment of media options. Three U.S. TV channels gave rise to twenty, which in turn became five hundred, which led to a glut of thousands of competing options. Not only are there more choices of what to watch, there are more choices of how to watch. A PVR provides a simple way to record shows (recall the scene in City Slickers about the machinations of VCR programming: The cows can tape something by now!). Popular shows are uploaded to the Internet moments after the original broadcast ends. DVD sets of complete seasons are popular stocking stuff ers. What do these three viewing methods have in common? They allow the consumer to bypass commercials easily.

    A handful of local radio stations have transformed into Internet music providers tailored to individual tastes. Meanwhile, instantaneous Web access to news from everywhere means that today’s local daily print newspaper now competes directly with an infinite number of paid and citizen-generated media options from around the world.

    As the noise grows louder and more desperate by the minute, the question must be asked: Does anyone listen?

    The Marketplace: The Battle Wages On

    Workers are bypassing vacation and working longer hours because the market demands it. Something that was once a desirable innovation (e.g., the basic cell phone) soon becomes an industry norm, and before long, a newer model replaces it (e.g., feature-rich smartphones). Eventually products with more appealing features become the milestones of progress that consumers crave and provide significant justification for working longer and harder.

    Consumers want better, faster, and cheaper products made exactly the way they like them. In spite of living in an age of abundance, relaxation seems to elude most people. The reason is simple: in spite of already having a great many possessions, consumers are still insatiable.

    This is not surprising given the explosion of choice that surrounds them. Seven times as many items can be found in a typical grocery store today, compared to stores from a generation ago.¹⁸ eBay’s ninety million active members participate in auctions for more than $15 billion of merchandise per quarter.¹⁹ For those who like music, eleven million songs await on the iTunes Store.²⁰ Readers can peruse Amazon.com’s twenty-eight million book titles (of course, Jeff Bezos would remind you that the site now sells much more than books).²¹

    As documented in Chris Anderson’s The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less for More, customers are increasingly flocking to microniches in retail, entertainment, technology, food, and fashion, as new forms of production and retailing aid and abet the subdivision.

    Each successive generation of brand building has been marked by some gap or desire in the culture at large and a diff erent marketing driver of value. In the golden age of branding, brands became the messengers and outward badges of surrogate identity (I drive a Cadillac; look at me!). Now the decline of traditional social capital—the real-world trust and goodwill held for institutions like government, family, police, and religion—and the deterioration of local community ties have made brands focal points for social participation and shared group values (I’m an Apple fanatic. Are you one too?).

    Evidence? Consider that, at the time of this writing, Starbucks has more than 1 million Twitter followers, is liked by more than 15 million on Face-book, and has attracted 100,000 user-generated contributions to its MyStar bucksIdea.com site. And this isn’t a case of selecting the front-runner to overstate a point. Many other companies have similar-sized or larger networks; for example, Whole Foods has more than 1.8 million followers on Twitter.²²

    In Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam points to the collapse of the American community and the void of social capital that now exists: ²³

    The average person lives in fourteen homes during his or her lifetime. We do not put down roots in our neighborhood/city.

    We spend a third less time on family dinners. We have become disconnected from family rituals.

    The average person will have ten to fourteen jobs before the age of thirty-eight. We have become less defined by our occupation.

    We spend 45 percent less time having friends over to our homes. We have lost touch with our close social circles.

    In the absence of this social capital, enlightened brands are providing forums for participation and engagement that tap into people’s shared interests and socialization needs. Brand engagement has become the holy grail for marketers, and embracing brand communities are a promising means of achieving it.

    The shift from broadcast-based messaging and media to community-based collaboration and conversation requires fundamental changes to marketing practices. Customers have seized control, and CEOs know it. In a Microsoft roundtable survey, CEOs ranked customer service and customer experience as their second and third priorities, just behind business strategy.²⁴ Contrast that with the fixation marketers have on advertising (ranked twelfth by CEOs) and promotions (ranked fourteenth), and you see how marketers have drifted away not only from what actually drives company value, but also from what their executives believe drives value.

    In today’s economy, building brand value has become more a function of what you actually do rather than what you say you do; how you live the brand rather than how you manage the brand; and who is involved in your network rather than who is being targeted by your communication. Wikibrands enable this new view of marketing and are achieving business impact—often with less investment.

    The business world has woken up to the fact that there really isn’t a choice. The distance between organization and customer has to be bridged. The last couple of decades have been marked by extracting as much efficiency and cost containment as possible out of organizations. Companies have almost reached the limits of outsourcing, downsizing, right-sizing, and reorganizing for delivering bottom-line performance. Cisco’s CEO John Chambers has made the following bet: The second phase of productivity growth is going to be about collaboration and network-enabled technologies. This is candidly being driven by our customers. They’ve said we need to understand better what you’re going to do, where you’re going to interoperate, where you’re going to compete. ²⁵

    A ray of light exists. Five years into the mainstreaming of social media, smart companies are finally figuring out how active customer participation can drive their business forward. For example, Frito-Lay has run successful contests in many countries where consumers created commercials that aired during the Super Bowl or developed new products with impressive creative and payout performance.

    In a connected world and cluttered marketplace, brands are tapping into the instinctual human need for genuine participation, peer-to-peer dialogue, and shared media to survive and thrive. Word of mouth. User-generated content. Social media. Microblogging. Prosumerism. Online communities. Crowdsourcing. Customer-driven experience. Customer rating systems and forums. It’s all so powerful, exciting, and new. But what’s a brand to do?

    We looked at the question of how business operates in these spheres through the worlds of brand development, customer collaboration, and the social Web to challenge key assumptions, debunk myths, and get to the heart of the matter. Wikibrands provide hard-won lessons on how to use the powers of customer collaboration, not just for Web start-ups and personal brands, but also for large companies and their brands.

    Drawing from multimillion-dollar research projects, studies of hundreds of brand-customer collaborations, and direct interviews with hundreds of leading executives, marketing leaders, digital and online community architects, we have identified how and why successful brands compete in the twenty-first century, their core motivations for venturing into customer collaboration, and the nine elements essential for successfully building and managing a wikibrand. We also uncover implications for anyone who wants to conduct business successfully in today’s landscape.

    As this book’s subtitle states, it is about reinvention. It is a tough road to turn and pivot department functions or entire companies. By looking at top companies that are practicing wikibrands, we provide the arguments and ability to make the case for change in all companies and industries.

    We have provided a balanced viewpoint from a wide variety of resources on what businesses need to do succeed with wikibrands. A higher-order challenge exists within companies today. It’s not Should we do engagement anymore? It’s more What do we do? and How do we do it? in order to lead opinion and stakeholder groups to rally behind the brand.

    Who is this book for? When we set off on this venture of distilling the insights from the world’s top organizations, we believed businesspeople, entrepreneurs, and executives were our core audience. This book is about winning and thriving in a muddied and quickly changing marketplace. Of course, given our backgrounds and the stories provided, we believe marketing and communications people who are empowered to lead this charge would naturally find this book helpful in managing the sea of change. On the flip side, we believe this text can also find a place in the world of digital experts and social media enthusiasts and establish some discipline and rigor for how these powerful social tools can work effectively and realistically within corporate environments. Finally, we think anybody who has an intellectual curiosity about how some of the world’s most engaged businesses wake up every morning and engage their audiences will find it interesting.

    This book is supplemented by a regularly updated website that features links to all the videos and key websites mentioned; Hall of Fame, a videoblog of our research journey; site membership; and a practical online wikibrand guidebook. In addition, awards for the best wikibrands will be announced. We too have seen the social Web and want to create an ecosystem of content, community, and interest well beyond the confines of the printed page. In each chapter of this book, our experts and colleagues provide role models, success stories, best practices, and reference tools to bring our conclusions to life. We would like to hear your stories—visit our website at wiki-brands.com.

    Business-customer collaboration can be one of the biggest gifts to land in a marketer’s lap since the advent of TV and a prized jewel for digital firms to monetize their wares. It’s a unique chance to get Silicon Valley, Madison Avenue, Wall Street, and Main Street (and their international equivalents) to work together. The choice is simple for brands, their owners, and key stakeholders—open up to your audience and become much more engaged with customers, or risk being rendered irrelevant outside and inside your company. The big question is whether you will take advantage of this opportunity. Heed the call—and let’s get wiki!

    CHAPTER 2

    THE WIKIBRAND RALLYING CRY

    The New Mad Men

    The AMC show Mad Men has been a favorite of TV critics and resonates with those of us who passionately follow brand culture. Even without a big studio budget, the show dazzles viewers with its obsessive attention to detail, from authentic promotional material to the proper covers for the secretaries’ typewriters. Would the junior people in your office look puzzled at the very mention of typewriter covers? They would certainly be surprised by the office culture that includes (by our standards) outrageously sexist behavior, fistfights in the bullpen, and ubiquitous afternoon cocktails.

    Advertising is based on one thing, happiness. And you know what happiness is? Happiness is the smell of a new car. It’s freedom from fear. It’s a billboard on the side of the road that screams reassurance that whatever you are doing is okay. You are okay.

    —DON DRAPER,

    creative director,

    Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce, on the television show "Mad Men"

    What could the real world of today and the JFK-era world depicted in Mad Men possibly have in common? Perhaps more than meets the eye. Similar to the constellation of flawed characters from the fictional Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce ad agency, we all struggle with our convenient illusions and vices to explain the chaos around us. The Cold War has left, but the war on terror is here now. In the sixties, the broadcast-driven consumer age had become the mainstream. There was a sea change of industrial expansion and media upheaval. By 1963, newspapers had finally been supplanted by TV as the key source of information. And Don and his agency of mad men were helping clients master this exciting, sexy, new medium. This is not altogether dissimilar to the massive changes confronting today’s business, with digital, mobile, and the Web leaping out of TV’s shadow and a whole new set of mad men (and women) now trying to figure it out for themselves and their clients.

    Don Draper, the handsome and seemingly self-assured creative director and pitchman played by Jon Hamm, in a moment of clairvoyance about why people buy, states, You are the product. You feeling something. That’s what sells. So it is with our current use of Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. We want to project a face to the world that is positive, fresh, appealing, and human. We realize all too well on a personal and corporate level that in today’s environment we are the product we’re selling.

    As much as we voyeuristically look at the characters on Mad Men and their blind, in-the-moment response to the immense political, business, and social change going on in their era, many of us are oblivious to the massive changes going on around us right now. The show is cathartic; we can laugh or revel in how diff erent times were just forty to fifty years ago with twenty-twenty hindsight. But is our time really any diff erent? Years from now, when they chronicle the early part of this century, will people laugh at the same things we swooned over and found captivating? The Mad Men characters’ fascination with the TV medium is equivalent to our addiction to Facebook and social networks. Their need for continuing wealth is our drive for seeking purpose. Their need to understand the collective psyche of their customers and play it back to those customers in broadcast

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